On Ant Spit

Ant researchers have long known that ants swap food and enzymes orally through a process called “trophallaxis” (tro-fuh-lax-is). Ants use a special organ, the crop, as a kind of “social stomach” – many workers eat food only to regurgitate it into larvae. But a recent study has found that this ant spit may serve another critical purpose: communication.

cfloridanus
If this ant wants to talk to you, it will spit in your mouth. Photo: Alex Wild

In the study, Dr. Adria LeBoeuf and colleagues investigated the chemicals that are present in orally transmitted fluids in a carpenter ant species, Camponotus floridanus. To their surprise, they found that many of the proteins and other compounds in the ant spit were not related to food but to other functions. One of the compounds, juvenile hormone, is known to be highly important in the regulation of larval growth, and its presence in the ant spit suggests regulation of larval development in an ant colony may be partially controlled by trophallaxis.

Such a diversity of important, non-food compounds in ant spit suggests that ants engage in communication through trophallaxis. However, further studies will be needed to firmly establish that ants regulate these chemicals in response to environmental conditions. Regardless, this work by LaBoeuf and colleagues may turn ant spit into a focal component of research on ant communication.

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8 responses to “On Ant Spit”

  1. Derek Langston Avatar
    Derek Langston

    Maybe this is a morbid and ill informed question, but would this compound be present in the mouth of an ant who had consumed a young ant?

    Liked by 1 person

      1. Derek Langston Avatar
        Derek Langston

        *gasp* Well then…

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Derek Langston Avatar
        Derek Langston

        Also, this is a thing?! “Trophallaxis /ˌtroʊfəlˈæksɪs/ is the transfer of food or other fluids among members of a community through mouth-to-mouth (stomodeal) or anus-to-mouth (proctodeal) feeding.”

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Benjamin Blanchard Avatar

        Indeed! I usually refer to the latter as “oral-anal trophallaxis”. My advisor, Dr. Corrie Moreau, mentions this at one point in this video.

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      4. Derek Langston Avatar
        Derek Langston

        “oral-anal trophallaxis” does not work so well with the human population according to the German medical documentary, “The Human Centipede”.

        Liked by 1 person

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